Thursday, March 3, 2016

Event Update For 2016-03-02

The seas, lakes and oceans are now pluming deadly hydrogen sulfide and suffocating methane. Hydrogen sulfide is a highly toxic water-soluble heavier-than-air gas and will accumulate in low-lying areas. Methane is slightly more buoyant than normal air and so will be all around, but will tend to contaminate our atmosphere from the top down. These gases are sickening and killing oxygen-using life all around the world, including human life, as our atmosphere is increasingly poisoned. Because both gases are highly flammable and because our entire civilization is built around fire and flammable fuels, this is leading to more fires and explosions. This is an extinction level event and will likely decimate both the biosphere and human population and it is debatable whether humankind can survive this event.

A. More fires and more explosions, especially along the coasts, but everywhere generally.
B. Many more animal die-offs, of all kinds, and especially oceanic species.
C. More multiples of people will be found dead in their homes, as if they'd dropped dead.
D. More corpses found in low-lying areas, all over the world.
E. More unusual vehicular accidents.
F. Improved unemployment numbers as people die off.

Quote: "Hydrogen sulfide is being blamed for Shiloh’s wastewater to smell like rotten eggs, Village Engineer Norm Etling said on Tuesday."

Quote: "'The hydrogen sulfide reading in the wet well of the Archview lift station was between 5 and 6 ppm. When we proceeded to the manhole on Eden Park Boulevard where the force main from Archview lift station discharges, the hydrogen sulfide readings spiked to over 100 ppm and rose to as high as 150, which are far above the safe level,' Peek wrote in a letter to Etling dated Jan. 18, 2016."

Quote: "23 students were taken to a New Jersey hospital to be checked out Wednesday following an unknown odor in a classroom. The children were from the third-grade at an elementary school in South Amboy. Two classrooms were complaining of nose, eyes and throats burning."

Quote: "Using unofficial data and adjusting for different base-line temperatures, it appears that February 2016 was likely somewhere between 1.15 and 1.4 degrees warmer than the long-term average, and about 0.2 degrees above last month—good enough for the most above-average month ever measured."

Quote: "The Laptev Sea Ice is fracturing. This is one of the most dangerous places in the Arctic. Vast amounts of methane hydrates are on the ocean floor here. There are also reservoirs of free methane here stored under high pressure."

Quote: "Meanwhile evidence is mounting that the long-feared circulation decline is already well underway."

Note: And the heat that that current would normally bring to Europe - where is that heat going? Backing up along the East Coast? Multiple nuclear plants have had to shut down in recent years on the US East Coast because the OCEAN was too warm to cool them. If that becomes 'normal', then either the East Coast will go dark from lack of electricity as all the nuclear plants are shut down, or the East Coast will end up glowing in the dark from melted-down nuclear plants...

Quote: "Trenton residents began reporting their experiences of these booms after they heard it for the first time Feb. 14. 'I instantly made a post on our emergency management Facebook page and asked if anyone else heard it,' Briggs said. 'We had close to 100 people comment saying they heard it. Several people said they felt it. They described a loud thud, rattling, some saw flashes of light and smoke.'"

Quote: "They have also stated that the blast happened due to gas accumulation in water tank."

Note: That actually sounds fairly truthful. Both methane and hydrogen sulfide are water-soluble, so if the water gets contaminated with one or both, then like the rivers that have caught fire and the flammable water found in people's taps in recent years, you might see an explosion and/or fire involving a water tank. These are the 68th and 69th residential explosions in 2016...

Quote: "Firefighters faced 80-km/h winds and frigid conditions while battling a fire that levelled a barn in Smithville Tuesday night. The barn, at 363 Mud St. E., was being used to store antiques, boats and vintage cars."

Note: Boats plural, so at least two. These are the 594th, 595th and 596th boats or ships to burn in 2016...

Quote: "A school bus caught fire Wednesday evening. Police officers and firefighters responded about 6:30 p.m. to a parking lot at 185 Lehigh Avenue to find the bus engulfed in flames, according to township police Sgt. Erik Miick. He didn't know the owner of the bus. Nobody was on board and nobody was injured in the emergency response."

Note: This is the 58th school bus to burn in 2016 and this is the 171st bus to burn in 2016...

Quote: "However, he noticed his truck had caught fire and attempted to stop but crashed into a cement barrier. 'I saw a fire from the bottom, from the motor inside my truck, so that's why I lost my power, hit the wall and that's when a big fire started,' said Benitez."

Quote: "It was mayhem on the highways in Indian River County Wednesday. There were three fiery tractor trailer incidents in less than 24 hours, all within 8 miles of each other. The time and location the crashes seem to be a sheer coincidence."

Note: Also see the tractor trailer that crashed at 5 AM and burst into flame on I-95 in Indian River County on this day. Not sure what the third fiery big rig incident was...

Quote: "A Pontiac industrial building suffered heavy smoke damage Wednesday night after a vehicle was found burning inside. Waterford Regional Fire crews were called to the 300 block of Sanford in Pontiac around 9:30 p.m. Arriving crews saw heavy smoke coming from the commercial building, said Deputy Fire Chief Matt Covey. Fire crews had a difficult time gaining access to the property due to a security gate, but were able to gain entry and locate the vehicle in the unoccupied building and extinguish the fire."

Quote: "Units were alerted at 3:39 a.m. when a 911 call from the homeowner, a Mr. Smith, reported the fire to the county emergency dispatch center. Firefighters from Flintstone found the structure fully engulfed in flames. The barn reportedly housed vehicles, a skidder and chickens among other items, according to the 911 center."

Quote: "A deadly house fire overnight is posing a mystery for investigators as they try to figure out what happened. Firefighters found the body of a 96-year-old man inside the burned home - but the fire started outside."

Quote: "West Kelowna RCMP is investigating after two bodies were found in the Shannon Lake area early Wednesday morning. According to police, the body of a man and woman were found in the area of Shannon Way and Westville Way around 7:00 a.m. The deaths have been deemed as sudden deaths and the BC Coroners Service has been called in to help investigate."

Quote: "A post-mortem found traces of thiosulphate in Sharma's blood and urine, something forensic toxicologist Helen Poulsen said was an indicator of hydrogen sulphide poison."

Quote: "A retired Melbourne paediatrician's death in a New Zealand motel's thermal pool was consistent with drowning but a corner hasn't ruled out other causes. These include the possibility Rotorua's potentially lethal hydrogen sulfide gas could have been a contributing factor."

Note: A man, 37, was just found dead on a bike trail near the Willamette River in Eugene the day prior too, and a man, 34, was found dead on the banks of the Willamette River in Portland too, both events mentioned in the 2016-03-01 update...

Quote: "A naked suspect was taken into custody in East San Jose after a bizarre series of events. According to police, a man who was naked was driving along Canoga Drive when he rammed the vehicle through a metal gate. He then ran through another gate and started circling a grassy area where he hit a telephone pole. Police say the suspect proceeded to crash into a patrol car. Police Tased the man and took him into custody."

Dangerous diseases could possibly be riding the ocean currents from country to country thanks to El Niño, and some scientists think it may be happening more often because of climate change. [yah - "could possibly" - nice; don't want to spook the herd with the TRUTH or anything that interrupts the sacred ECONOMY - which is tanking globally]

Bird droppings were the likely cause of a December shutdown at a nuclear power plant outside New York City, according to the operator.

An Indian Point reactor safely shut down for three days starting Dec. 14 following an electrical disturbance on outdoor high voltage transmission lines, Entergy Corp. said. An outside expert is analyzing whether what's technically called bird "streaming" was the culprit. [I seriously doubt they're telling the truth here.]

[This one's for you Jonny - you gotta get out more!]Joe Walsh & Bad Company Announce ‘One Hell Of A Night’ Summer Tourhttp://www.glidemagazine.com/156483/joe-walsh-bad-company-announce-one-hell-night-summer-tour/

CDC to investigate bacterial infection that has killed 18 in Wisconsinhttp://www.upi.com/Health_News/2016/03/03/CDC-to-investigate-bacterial-infection-that-has-killed-18-in-Wisconsin/8411457023069/

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is investigating 18 deaths and 44 cases of infection from Elizabethkingia in Wisconsin. The agency is investigating how people came in contact with the bacteria, which rarely infects humans but is often antibiotic-resistant. The agency has dispatched experts to investigate. Most infected patients are over age 65 and have at least one other underlying illness, according to the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Symptoms of Elizabethkingia infection include fever, shortness of breath, chills or cellulitis.

Segments of Atoyac River in Mexico disappear overnight after giant crack openshttp://www.sott.net/article/313657-Segments-of-Atoyac-River-in-Mexico-disappear-overnight-after-giant-crack-opens

The Atoyac River, which crosses eight municipalities in the central mountainous area of ​​eastern Mexican state of Veracruz, disappeared overnight after a giant crack opened up. Inhabitants of Rancho San Fermin reported hearing a bang and feeling the earth rumbled as the ground cracked down.

Eek! Well, the ocean floor is littered with big craters, and many of those likely came from 'gas domes' like that one exploding, like the underwater version of those huge methane craters in Siberia, so we know for sure that that has happened and does happen - so I think it's going to happen, if it hasn't already, and not just there but in many places. It's not like they're gonna kindly bulge but not enough to rupture - they're gonna bulge and if the pressure gets high enough then the gas will leak out and/or explode out, like a balloon leaking or popping.